NFLPA gets behind suspended players

The union says the players weren't adequately informed that the supplement they were taking contained the banned diuretic bumetanide, an ingredient not listed on the label of the supplement. The diuretic can be a masking agent for steroids.

The league counters that it sent two notifications that the manufacturer of the supplement, StarCaps, had been added to the list of banned supplement companies. Those letters, the league said, were sent to club presidents, GMs and head trainers, and to NFLPA executive Stacy Robinson, who oversees the steroid policy for the union.

But isn't the real issue here simpler that that? NFL policy couldn't be more clear: Players are responsible for what they put in their bodies. In an age when illegal performance-enhancing drugs have become such a blight on sports, the notion that any athlete would grab a supplement off the shelf without first having it cleared by his trainer defies logic.

A player who fails to closely monitor what he's taking does so at his own risk. And in this case, ignorance would not seem to be an adequate excuse. Now, if the players were told specifically that the supplement was cleared, that's a different matter, but there's no indication of that.